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The Cinematic Enfant Terrible : Rule Breaking Children and Teenagers in French Cinema

2025 - Bloomsbury Publishing

288 p.

"The Cinematic Enfant Terrible" is a groundbreaking study of rule breakers in French cinema.The book approaches the concept of the "enfant terrible" in the literal sense of the term - young people labelled 'terrible' (awful) by the adult generation. It explores a rich cinematic tradition from Jean Vigo's "Zéro de conduite" (1933) and François Truffaut's "Les Quatre cents coups" (1959), to Catherine Breillat's "36 fillette "(1988) and Ladj Ly's" Les Misérables" (2019). The book encompasses the cinematic "enfants terribles" across age groups and genders, addressing the differences between unruly boys and rebellious teenage girls. The early post-war focus on juvenile delinquency and sexual provocations diversifies into "filles fatales" and" "angry girls, but also precarious boys" "and "parents terribles".The book charts the evolution of the "enfant terrible" concept from a negative label to a sympathetically-viewed figure of anti-authoritarian resistance, reflecting the changing position of children within the

family in post-war France. The films address the ethical paradox of democratic upbringing - the dilemma of raising children to become obedient individuals with a mind of their own. The asymmetrical relationship between children and parents is seen as a tacit "family contract" that highlights the importance of an intergenerational perspective for the understanding of generational conflicts.Rebellious children and teenagers on screen are seen in the light of wider social transformations. The book clarifies the interplay between individual protests and cultural currents such as existentialism, feminism and ethnic conflicts. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of French culture and cinema, childhood and youth studies, gender studies and cultural studies. [Publisher's Text]